Organized crime has been romanticized in American film and television media. Although some of the depictions are stereotyped and exaggerated, many of the core elements revealed in fictionalized accounts of organized crime are real. The history of organized crime in America is linked with important historical and political events including the prohibition of both drugs and alcohol.
According to the United States National Security Council (2013), organized crime is defined by the primary goal of economic or financial gains. Organized crime exists often because underclass groups seek a means of acquiring wealth and status, or bolstering opportunities for pursuing or achieving the American Dream. This fundamental feature distinguishes organized crime from, say, terrorist groups that might have a primary goal that is more political in nature such as the recognition of a new nation state of ethnic minority groups. Another definition of organized crime takes into account the more recent trans-national scope of the organizations related to the use of new technologies to further criminal goals (Dobovsek, 1996).
Organized crime syndicates do rely on violence as a core tactic of intimidation, social control, and the means by which to acquire or maintain power. However, organized crime uses politics and corrupted politicians as a means to an end. Both illegitimate, or illegal, businesses...
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